THE PARTIES' ARGUMENTS
25 United Voice's argument is that the contentions advanced by One Tree are completely unfounded, novel only because they are unarguable and that the course proposed by United Voice accords entirely with many years of industrial process. United Voice also argues, in summary, that the relatively straightforward arbitration proceeding, listed for only half a day, should be permitted to proceed in its ordinary course, rather than be deferred for resolution of this jurisdictional dispute, which is much more likely to take up considerably greater resources and costs.
26 Shortly put, the argument raised by One Tree is that in the absence of any arbitration agreement between One Tree and United Voice or any transferring employee, the Commission has no jurisdiction to arbitrate the Dispute, as any attempt to do so against the will of One Tree involves the impermissible exercise of the judicial power of the Commonwealth. That is, it is said, because such arbitration in the Commission can only be consensual.
27 It is common ground that the Commission ordinarily exercises a power of 'private arbitration'. One Tree contends that by the EA, which covers and applies to it by operation of statutory device, it has not accepted any private arbitration by the Commission. It argues that any attempt to arbitrate would amount to the determination of existing rights and obligations in the absence of One Tree's consent and would amount to an impermissible exercise of judicial power by a body other than a Ch III Court. This follows, it says, from ss 595(1), 595(3), 595(5), 738(b) and 739(4) of the FW Act, all of which operate only on the premise of the parties agreeing that the Commission may arbitrate. Those provisions are relevantly as follows:
595 [Commission's] power to deal with disputes
(1) The [Commission] may deal with a dispute only if the [Commission] is expressly authorised to do so under or in accordance with another provision of this Act.
(2) The [Commission] may deal with a dispute (other than by arbitration) as it considers appropriate, including in the following ways:
(a) by mediation or conciliation;
(b) by making a recommendation or expressing an opinion.
(3) The [Commission] may deal with a dispute by arbitration (including by making any orders it considers appropriate) only if the [Commission] is expressly authorised to do so under or in accordance with another provision of this Act.
Example: Parties may consent to the [Commission] arbitrating a bargaining dispute (see subsection 240(4)).
(4) In dealing with a dispute, the [Commission] may exercise any powers it has under this Subdivision.
Example: The [Commission] could direct a person to attend a conference under section 592.
(5) To avoid doubt, the [Commission] must not exercise the power referred to in subsection (3) in relation to a matter before the [Commission] except as authorised by this section.
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Subdivision B - Dealing with disputes
738 Application of this Division
This Division applies if:
…
(b) an enterprise agreement includes a term that provides a procedure for dealing with disputes, including a term referred to in subsection 186(6); or
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739 Disputes dealt with by the [Commission]
(1) This section applies if a term referred to in section 738 requires or allows the [Commission] to deal with a dispute.
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(4) If, in accordance with the term, the parties have agreed that the [Commission] may arbitrate (however described) the dispute, the [Commission] may do so.
Note: The [Commission] may also deal with a dispute by mediation or conciliation, or by making a recommendation or expressing an opinion (see subsection 595(2)).
(5) Despite subsection (4), the [Commission] must not make a decision that is inconsistent with this Act, or a fair work instrument that applies to the parties.
(6) The [Commission] may deal with a dispute only on application by a party to the dispute.
(Emphasis added.)
28 Section 313 of the FW Act, which is pivotal to resolution of this issue, provides:
313 Transferring employees and new employer covered by transferable instrument
(1) If a transferable instrument covered the old employer and a transferring employee immediately before the termination of the transferring employee's employment with the old employer, then:
(a) the transferable instrument covers the new employer and the transferring employee in relation to the transferring work after the time (the transfer time) the transferring employee becomes employed by the new employer; and
(b) while the transferable instrument covers the new employer and the transferring employee in relation to the transferring work, no other enterprise agreement or named employer award that covers the new employer at the transfer time covers the transferring employee in relation to that work.
(2) To avoid doubt, a transferable instrument that covers the new employer and a transferring employee under paragraph (1)(a) includes any individual flexibility arrangement that had effect as a term of the transferable instrument immediately before the termination of the transferring employee's employment with the old employer.
(3) This section has effect subject to any FWC order under subsection 318(1).
29 One Tree contends that the drafting and structure of the combination of the statutory provisions no doubt reflects constitutional limitations on the capacity of the Commonwealth legislature to confer judicial power on a body other than a Ch III court and no doubt seeks to conform with the judgment of the High Court of Australia in Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Australian Industrial Relation Commission (2001) 203 CLR 645 (the Private Arbitration case). The High Court (Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne and Callinan JJ) stated ([26], [29]-[31]):
26 So far as concerns arbitrated provisions with respect to dispute resolution procedures, it should be noted that a dispute as to the powers the Commission should, but does not have, is not an industrial dispute and will not ground an award by which the Commission gives itself power to do that which it is not otherwise authorised to do. Moreover, an arbitrated dispute resolution provision will be invalid to the extent that it purports to confer judicial power on the Commission or any one else. For present purposes, it is sufficient to note that a power to make a binding determination as to legal rights and liabilities arising under an award or agreement is, of its nature, judicial power.
…
29 What was said in Hegarty applies, but with some modification, to an agreement by parties to an industrial situation. As already indicated, it is incidental to the conciliation and arbitration power for the Parliament to permit parties to an industrial situation to agree on the terms on which they will settle the matters in issue between them conditional upon their agreement having the same legal effect as an award. So, too, it is incidental to that power for the Parliament to give legal effect to agreed procedures for maintaining a settlement of that kind and, also, for it to authorise the Commission to participate in those procedures.
30 There is, however, a significant difference between agreed and arbitrated dispute settlement procedures. As already indicated, the Commission cannot, by arbitrated award, require the parties to submit to binding procedures for the determination of legal rights and liabilities under an award because Ch III of the Constitution commits power to make determinations of that kind exclusively to the courts. However, different considerations apply if the parties have agreed to submit disputes as to their legal rights and liabilities for resolution by a particular person or body and to accept the decision of that person as binding on them.
31 Where parties agree to submit their differences for decision by a third party, the decision maker does not exercise judicial power, but a power of private arbitration. Of its nature, judicial power is a power that is exercised independently of the consent of the person against whom the proceedings are brought and results in a judgment or order that is binding of its own force. In the case of private arbitration, however, the arbitrator's powers depend on the agreement of the parties, usually embodied in a contract, and the arbitrator's award is not binding of its own force. Rather, its effect, if any, depends on the law which operates with respect to it.
(Emphasis added, citations omitted.)
30 One Tree argues that there is a constitutional necessity for agreement (which is usually embodied in a contract) by the parties to a dispute to have the difference resolved by the Commission as expressly recognised by s 739(4) of the FW Act. The passages referred to in the Private Arbitration case make clear that the essential characteristic grounding the arbitrator's power is the agreement between the parties to submit disputes to a third party for determination. French CJ and Gageler J repeat this requirement in TCL Air Conditioner (Zhongshan) Co Ltd v Judges of Federal Court of Australia (2013) 251 CLR 533 (at [29]) in these terms:
Therein is the essential distinction between the judicial power of the Commonwealth and arbitral authority, of the kind governed by the Model Law, based on the voluntary agreement of the parties. The distinction has been articulated in the following terms:
Where parties agree to submit their differences for decision by a third party, the decision maker does not exercise judicial power, but a power of private arbitration. Of its nature, judicial power is a power that is exercised independently of the consent of the person against whom the proceedings are brought and results in a judgment or order that is binding of its own force. In the case of private arbitration, however, the arbitrator's powers depend on the agreement of the parties, usually embodied in a contract, and the arbitrator's award is not binding of its own force. Rather, its effect, if any, depends on the law which operates with respect to it.
The context of that articulation puts its reference to "private arbitration" in appropriate perspective. The context was that of a challenge to the capacity of a statutory body consistently with Ch III of the Constitution to exercise a statutory function to settle a dispute where so empowered by an agreement entered into as a result of statutory processes. The reference to "private arbitration" was not to a private function, as distinct from a public function, but rather to a function the existence and scope of which is founded on agreement as distinct from coercion.
(Emphasis added, citations omitted.)
31 Similarly in Rinehart v Hancock Prospecting Pty Ltd (2019) 93 ALJR 582 (at [85]), Edelman J observed that it was a 'fundamental principle that arbitration is a matter of contract'.
32 One Tree contends that general law conventional contractual principles of offer and acceptance apply in determining whether an arbitration agreement has been formed. That, it is said, is apparent from a number of cases, including the decision of Dowsett J in Balfour Beatty Power Construction Australia Pty Ltd v Kidston Goldmines Ltd [1989] 2 Qd R 105, followed by Emmett J in Hi-Fert Pty Ltd v United Shipping Adriatic Inc (1998) 89 FCR 166 (at 194-195).
33 In this instance there is no suggestion or evidence, One Tree argues, of any express or implied offer or acceptance necessary to establish an arbitration agreement, either between One Tree and United Voice or One Tree and any of the Transferring Employees. The only offer and acceptance, if any, was between Mission and its employees at the point the EA was 'made' under s 182(1) of the FW Act. Clearly One Tree had no involvement in that process.
34 It is not sufficient, One Tree argues, that the EA now 'covers' and applies to One Tree by operation of statute (s 313 of the FW Act), whether it likes it or not. That, One Tree says, cannot of itself establish a valid arbitration agreement. It is not even clear, for example, what the identity of the other party to that purported agreement would be. On this topic, One Tree also argues, even if United Voice could establish a valid arbitration agreement, the doctrine of 'separability' would apply requiring specific evidence of an intention to agree to cl 77.5: see Walter Rau Neusser Oel und Fett AG v Cross Pacific Trading Ltd [2005] FCA 1102 per Allsop J (as the Chief Justice then was) (at [89]).
35 Significantly, according to One Tree, unlike all the other various terms and conditions of employment agreed to between One Tree and the Transferring Employees, the terms of the EA, their existence and applicability to the employment were recognised 'as a matter of law' only, but were expressly noted as not forming part of the contract of employment. By cl 51 of the Contracts of Employment, it was provided:
To the extent permitted by law, any legislation or Applicable Industrial Instrument applies to the Employment as a matter of law and does not form part of this Agreement.
(Emphasis added.)
36 One Tree argues, therefore, that insofar as One Tree and the Transferring Employees were concerned, both parties expressly agreed to 'not agree' to the terms of the EA.
37 Further, the relevant parts of the agreement between One Tree and the Transferring Employees provided:
One Tree will recognise the length and continuity of your period of service with [Mission] (including any period of service deemed by law or contract) for all purposes (except redundancy entitlements) and will assume and take on any:
• accrued but untaken annual leave entitlements;
• accrued but untaken long service leave entitlements;
• accrued but untaken personal/carer's leave entitlements;
• accrued but untaken parental leave entitlements; and
• associated service-related entitlements that have accrued to you prior to the Commencement Date.
One Tree will not recognise prior service for the purposes of current or future redundancy entitlements (including any redundancy entitlements which may arise under Subdivision B of Division 11 of Part 2-2 of the [FW Act] or any Applicable Industrial Instrument).
(Emphasis added.)
38 One Tree argues that just as it did not 'have' to acquire Mission's assets, employees were not 'bound' to take One Tree's employment.